Ufo Plastics Rear Fender Black Ktm 125-520 Sx 98-03 on 2040-parts.com
Holland, Michigan, US
Frames for Sale
- Ufo plastics front fender white for honda crf 150r 07-09(US $31.12)
- Ufo plastics rear fender red for honda crf 250r 04-05(US $30.13)
- 1998 kawasaki kx250 kx 250 frame chassis(US $160.00)
- Ufo plastics front fender red universal dirt bike(US $28.40)
- Bbr motorsports frame cradle forged al sil yamaha tt-r125e 2000-2010(US $179.95)
- Suzuki sv650 sv1000 svs 2003-2009 second gen lightweight race subframe brg 03-09(US $265.00)
Drayson Racing aiming for Electric car World Land Speed Record
Thu, 30 May 2013The Drayson B12 69/EV – heading to RAF Elvington to break the EV land speed record. One of the best uses for electric car technology is to deliver copious amounts of instant torque for track cars – far more than an ICE engine manages – and Drayson Racing Technology is aiming to prove how much that electric power can help by taking its Drayson B12 69/EV to RAF Elvington on 25th June to attempt to break the land speed record for an EV. That record – 175mph – has stood since 1975 (which probably shows how little EV technology has really moved on in the last 40 years), but the low-drag version of the Drayson electric Le Mans prototype is aiming to break that down the 1.86 mile runway at Elvington.
Top Gear: The Motoring Ashes, Ferrari 599 GTO & Boris Becker
Sun, 30 Jan 2011Top Gear Ashes v Australia After a better than average start to the latest series of Top Gear (Series 16 AB), with a trio of tests and Scouse comic John Bishop proving there’s nothing quicker than a scouser in someone else’s car, tonight’s Top Gear looks promising too. It’s Top Gear Ashes time, with the boys attempting to heap more humiliation on the Land Down Under. They take up a challenge from the Australian Top Gear presenters in a car-based version of the Ashes.
AT&T Labs and Carnegie Mellon develop GPS-enabled haptic steering wheel
Fri, 30 Mar 2012AT&T Labs and Carnegie Mellon University have developed a new GPS-enabled steering wheel prototype that incporporates haptic technology. For those who need a quick refresher, haptic technology is a feedback system that uses vibrations to provide alerts, for example vibrating mobile 'phones or your games console controller. Here the tech is used to alert drivers when navigation maneuvers are approaching, with the steering wheel syncing with GPS-enabled computer systems.